Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 63 Part 2.djvu/632

 1::K ITX lMTTL A'IATTEljALj-TELECO(MMNIl('ATIONS-OCT. 2, 1947 (Chapter XV, art. 40 . 41 RR) (956-960) ference which the working in question causes to the 'coast or aeronautical station. 956 §2. Mobile stations using emissions of class Al, A2, or A3, outside the band from 405 to 535 kc/s must, as a general rule, give preference to the coast or aeronautical station estab- lished on the territory of the country of destination or of the country likely to be the most suitable transit route for radio- telegrams. 957 §3. If the sender of a radiotelegram handed in at a mobile station has indicated the coast or aeronautical station to which he desires his radiotelegram to be sent, the mobile station must, in order to effect this transmission to the coast or aeronautical station indicated, wait, if necessary, until the conditions specified in 954, 955 and 956 above are fulfilled. 958 §4. In order to facilitate disposal of traffic, and subject to such restrictions as individual governments may impose, coast stations may, in exceptional circumstances and with dis- cretion, without incurring additional charges, exchange radio- telegrams and service messages relating thereto. ARTICLE 41 Accounting for Radiotelegramp Section L Establishment of Accounts 959 §1. In principle, land station and ship and aircraft charges do not enter into the international telegraph accounts. 960§2. Governments reserve to themselves the right to make, between themselves and with the private enterprises concerned, different arrangements with a view to the adoption of other accounting systems, more specifically the adoption, as far as practicable, of the system by which the land station and 1929

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